Most Recent Messages of Each Discussion |
Created by |
Re:man, woman, boy, girl
"guy" is commonly used to refer to a man, while "guys" is often used to refer to a group of men or a mixed gender group (less commonly, a group of women).
Ex. "That guy in the blue shirt is drunk." (this will almost always refer to a male) Ex. "What are you guys doing tonight?" (this could refer to a group of men, a man and a woman, or even a group of women in some cases).
|
Language pair: English;
|
|
Kevin D.
June 18, 2018
# Msgs: 6
Latest: December 28, 2018
|
Language partners!anyone wants to study funny chinese?
hello everyone,i'm new here.I am a chinese student who wants to practice English and also learn Spanish.If you want to learn chinese,or just have someone to talk with,feel free to send me a email or messages!nice to meet you guys!
|
Language pair: English; Chinese, Mandarin
|
|
Blue m.
June 9, 2018
# Msgs: 1
|
I want to do English practise
Hello everyone, I want to improve my English speaking so I am looking for someone who speak English.
|
Language pair: Turkish; English
|
|
Elma K.
June 6, 2018
# Msgs: 1
|
|
Shackera
May 27, 2018
# Msgs: 1
|
|
Tai
May 16, 2018
# Msgs: 2
Latest: May 16, 2018
|
Re:USA Greetings
Depending on where you are you might hear things like, “Wassup” which is slang for what’s up. “What’s good?” Which is also slang for what’s up. All of these are informal and best used with friend.
|
Language pair: English;
|
|
Ky M.
May 9, 2018
# Msgs: 3
Latest: July 8, 2018
|
Philippines word vocabularies
1. How to say , how are you? *kamusta ka? *Kumusta kana? *Maayos kalang ba?
2. How to say, I love you? *Mahal kita *Iniibig kita *Sinisinta kita
3. How to say, Thankyou *Salamat (formal) *Salamat po ( informal) (friendly way to say)
|
Language pair: English; Filipino (Tagalog)
|
|
Danzel
April 24, 2018
# Msgs: 1
|
|
Liliya
April 17, 2018
# Msgs: 4
Latest: July 17, 2022
|
USA Greetings
Hello (Formal) Hi (Informal)
What's up? (Informal) How's it going? (formal) Howdy (informal/old but funny when I hear people say it)
Morning (Informal, but adding "Good" to the beginning makes it formal) Afternoon (Same as above) Evening (Same as above)
If you want to do nonverbal, a smile works, a nod of the head, or a wave is fine as well.
|
Language pair: English;
|
|
Joshua E.
March 21, 2018
# Msgs: 3
Latest: July 8, 2018
|
|
Victor L.
February 22, 2018
# Msgs: 2
Latest: May 16, 2018
|